A flurry of Rob Ford sightings late Friday night at Toronto’s Taste of the Danforth Festival is renewing questions about the mayor's behaviour.

A series of videos posted to YouTube between the hours of 11 p.m. ET on Friday night and early Saturday morning show Ford walking around the popular Greek food festival by himself, occasionally stopping to pose for photographs.

Mala Turay posted a video online that shows Ford surrounded by people on a side street off of Danforth Avenue.

"The further he came up along the Danforth, the more people he was talking to, (and) the more obvious he became," Turay said.

Later in the video he can be heard asking people where to find the party.

"He said that about four or five times, ‘Let's go party up here’, ‘Where's the party at over there’, just going on," Turay said. "He's the mayor. He should be setting a better example if he's representing our city like that."

As Ford walked along the Danforth, the public swarmed for more photos and videos, with staff and police arriving later to escort the mayor.

"The police weren't saying much. The staff weren't saying much, you know, whispering in his ear every now and then," Turay said. "He's just taking pictures, trying to be a friendly guy."

'I'm big news. I'm a big guy'

CBC’s Tony Smyth later saw the mayor at an Etobicoke gas station buying snacks at approximately 1 a.m. Saturday morning before walking back home.

When told that his actions on the Danforth made him "big news" on Friday night, Ford replied: "I'm big news. I'm a big guy."

"I guess anything happens with me is big, right?" he added.

Ford has been embroiled in an on-going controversy since May around a video that allegedly shows him smoking crack-cocaine.

"There is something there and I think many of us have been privy to it. However, I don't really want to focus on that," Mihevc said. "It is up to the mayor to come clean and to figure out what he needs to do to pull his life together."

Coun. Jaye Robinson, who was removed from Ford's executive committee in early June, said on Saturday that this latest incident is more proof that the mayor should "take a leave of absence, address his personal problems and then come back to continue to act as the mayor of Toronto."